EPA carried out 50 inspections at creamery in North Cork last year

North Cork Creameries in Kanturk was ordered last month by the EPA to stop discharging effluent from the site into the River Allow due to ongoing non-compliance with emission limit values, plunging its future into uncertainty.
EPA carried out 50 inspections at creamery in North Cork last year

The North Cork Creameries site in Kanturk was the subject of inspections on 50 occasions last year, the highest number of any site in the country. Picture: Noel Sweeney

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has said the North Cork Creameries site in Kanturk was the subject of inspections on 50 occasions last year, the highest number of any site in the country.

It comes as the number of complaints made by members of the public over foul smells coming from industrial or waste sites almost doubled last year.

In its 2025 sector enforcement summary, the EPA reported that the food and drinks sector accounted for half of all complaints it received last year, while just five sites accounted for nearly three in five complaints from the public.

“Odour is a persistent issue at a small number of licensed sites,” said Pamela McDonnell, programme manager at the EPA’s office of environmental enforcement.

“Operators must be good neighbours by preventing nuisance odours from impacting on people in their local communities. The EPA will continue to take action where odour nuisance occurs, including escalating enforcement measures.”

In addition to receiving 1,181 complaints in 2025, including odour complaints rising to 753 from 388 the previous year, the EPA said it conducted 1,681 inspections of sites in the industrial and waste sectors last year.

Compliance

While it said compliance was good overall, there were a few problem sites identified, as just 5% of sites accounted for 39% of all detected non-compliances.

The site that was inspected the most by the EPA last year was North Cork Creameries. The next most was 18 times.

The plant was ordered last month by the EPA to stop discharging effluent from the site into the River Allow due to ongoing non-compliance with emission limit values, plunging its future into uncertainty.

The EPA said the discharge will not be permitted to resume until it is satisfied that the licensee can reliably maintain steady-state compliance with licence requirements on an ongoing basis.

In its report, the watchdog said it was one of its 10 “national priority sites” to focus on last year.

Increased enforcement

Only three remained on the list at the end of the year, and the EPA said it came from increased enforcement and a corresponding “rise in investment to commitment to compliance”.

As well as water discharge, the agency said the anaerobic digestion sector has presented “persistent challenges” including inadequate measures to control odours and insufficient infrastructure.

Separately, it said that five cases were concluded in either the district or circuit court last year, resulting in a conviction in industrial and waste cases.

These resulted in fines being imposed on firms totalling €246,000 and a further €152,500 in donations imposed by the court.

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